Police Throw Temper Tantrum with 5-Year-Old | Kevin Christmon and Dionne Holliday Case Analysis

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Dr. Todd Grande

Dr. Todd Grande

Жыл бұрын

This video answers the question: Can I analyze the case of Kevin Christmon and Dionne Holliday?
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Пікірлер: 1 900
@scarn3241
@scarn3241 Жыл бұрын
5 years old … the adults involved in this are disgraceful
@ashleyvestal9030
@ashleyvestal9030 Жыл бұрын
Agree totally, but a 5 year old assaulted my 4 year old daughter in the early 90's and left permanent disfigurement. There has to be a better way to deal with such children. They need intense psychiatric intervention.
@Masterho310
@Masterho310 Жыл бұрын
@@ashleyvestal9030 That escalated quickly...
@brigidspencer5123
@brigidspencer5123 Жыл бұрын
No kidding! I have worked with many children and adolescents with special needs that includes traumatized children. Children learn to regulate their emotions from the adults around them. I have no empathy for these incompetent cops or the adults who don't seem able to handle an upset 5 year old, including the mother. This school must be staffed by idiots.
@jaymike3302
@jaymike3302 Жыл бұрын
They can yell at me for $275,000. Even at age 5 I'd know that was a good deal.
@fighterflight
@fighterflight Жыл бұрын
@@ashleyvestal9030 this child didn’t hurt anyone
@FilmArtPhoto
@FilmArtPhoto Жыл бұрын
If an adult is reacting to an upset child by screaming and threatening, they have already lost that fight because they've lost control. Good point about the cops being obsessed with dominating a situation and "forcing their way" through the problem. That is never going to work with a kindergartner... I mean, they might submit, but you've only succeeded in making them hate you. You haven't really worked through anything.
@Army4life82
@Army4life82 Жыл бұрын
I pray they don't have children good lord
@WWENETWORKGAMING
@WWENETWORKGAMING Жыл бұрын
No, no, you have to establish dominance first with the upset child, by ANY means. Cop showed restraint by not tasering the toddler..
@tw1705
@tw1705 Жыл бұрын
When are we going to wake up and demand police reform and the end of qualified immunity. A badge is basically a free pass to be a criminal, and sadly most of them are to one degree or another. Yes, there are relatively good cops, but they are all forced to look the other way at times. Anyway, it's a real dirty system and needs a good overhaul and a lot more oversight. Completely egregious, the behavior of the police. The vast majority of police officers are minions and yes men puppets with zero integrity, and the few good guys out there are forced to go along to get along or else they end up set up or dead.
@julielevinge266
@julielevinge266 Жыл бұрын
Odd that police are totally incapable of dealing with a problem that those dealing with young children do on a daily basis.😮
@chrishealton3830
@chrishealton3830 Жыл бұрын
@@WWENETWORKGAMING bad take
@pssurvivor
@pssurvivor Жыл бұрын
For a country where abortion and babies' lives is such a hot button issue, there doesn't seem to be much love or understanding of children. I used to run away from my swim classes cuz I was terrified of the water and every day my coach would personally go out and carry me back, repeat day after day, talking to me telling me that the water was ok. Eventually I got it, and I was able to participate in the training. That man showed me patience and understanding and as a small child I was able to pick up on it and move ahead
@PoopyBarfy
@PoopyBarfy Жыл бұрын
Yeah. If people loved their children, they would not abort them.
@gabe-po9yi
@gabe-po9yi Жыл бұрын
Yep, get those babies born to women who don’t want them, yet will rarely give them up for adoption.
@AlintraxAika
@AlintraxAika Жыл бұрын
The fetus is not a baby and the decision of an abortion involves much more than loving or not children.
@lillidaisyASMR
@lillidaisyASMR Жыл бұрын
OP was not trying to discuss the topic of abortion or adoption- she was just saying that for a country who pretends to care it sure doesn’t act like it towards children. Her story was not anecdotal and useless, just an example of how being shown some love and compassion as a child helped her grow through something many adults could’ve responded to with annoyance and rage. She was trying to show the different outcomes between the two responses..
@LoveLivesHere12
@LoveLivesHere12 Жыл бұрын
I think abortion doesn’t need to be the answer to a struggling mother. Perhaps giving her resources and bringing attention and awareness to the lack of training in the police force is more appropriate. It’s very cowardly to think an issue like this could “easily” have been resolved with abortion. Be better than this, please.
@everwhat013
@everwhat013 Жыл бұрын
i love how the mom was going along with the cops, encouraging them, saying she wishes she could beat him and get away with it. then she got dollar signs in her eyes.
@kingdele01
@kingdele01 Жыл бұрын
That was exactly what I thought! Money would make people sing a different tune really quickly.
@cantfindmykeys
@cantfindmykeys Жыл бұрын
It seems that she is too passive and can't deal with much of anything, so she follows any suggestion offered in a difficult situation. Probably the reason her kid is a monster. Some children are well behaved and others will take advantage of a passive adult and she probably filed the lawsuit after yet again being persuaded by somebody with a backbone. I remember growing up and discovering that the most difficult children were ones with a primary caregiver that didn't take control of whatever situation was at hand. My mother never disciplined us and was basically oblivious and agreeable to anything we said or did. We were monsters. My sister is still a monster but my brother and I grew out of being spoiled brats. Giving children carte blanche and not disciplining them isn't the best method. Neither is beating them. You need to find an acceptable middle ground.
@kingdele01
@kingdele01 Жыл бұрын
@@cantfindmykeys I agree with you! One can't be too much of a disciplinarian.
@cantfindmykeys
@cantfindmykeys Жыл бұрын
@@kingdele01 I think proper punishment is healthy but within limits. Beating on your kid will just create a cycle of abuse. I think removing privileges and dragging them to deliver an apology works pretty well without smacking them. Spanking and paddling and all that.. it works as humiliation. Like when we were paddled in school by a teacher. It was mostly embarrassing and not painful. No bruises or physical damage, just humiliation.
@dominickdolio2414
@dominickdolio2414 Жыл бұрын
As one who experienced childhood abuse I can honestly say not everyone needs a beating. Sometimes the parents do.
@shayb413
@shayb413 Жыл бұрын
I'm so sorry you went through this! And NO CHILD, EVER, EVVERRRRRR "needs" a beating, for ANY REASON! Studies show it is only very traumatizing and causes them Psychological problems. There are MANY ways you can discipline children, and you SHOULD, of course, but not by ever laying a hand on them in anger or punishment, or by causing them physical pain. There are many much more humane and also just more EFFECTIVE methods! I'm glad you made this comment, and I agree 100%- sometimes it's the PARENTS who need a beating instead- and in this case, these horrible, ridiculous excuse for Police officers!!
@jaybee9269
@jaybee9269 Жыл бұрын
@@shayb413 >> Any reason? Crossing against the red light? Sometimes you have to get their attention…
@rogerargueta5769
@rogerargueta5769 Жыл бұрын
Here, here.
@LisaPFrampton
@LisaPFrampton Жыл бұрын
Why haven't they been fired?! That little boy should never have been assaulted. I'll bet anything that they beat their own kids
@TheHogfatherInvades
@TheHogfatherInvades Жыл бұрын
@@jaybee9269 imagine viewing open acts of defiance as grounds for corporal punishment against children in general let alone a 5 year old. imagine equating corporal punishment to "getting their attention". the military pfp makes perfect sense.
@lazydaisy2292
@lazydaisy2292 Жыл бұрын
My daughter started kindergarten three weeks ago. When I went to pick her up after school, a little boy was throwing a fit, refusing to go back to class and screaming "bad teacher" They sent an adult out to watch him outside, from a distance while he calmed down. My question is why did the school call the police on a five year old in the first place? This is a kindergartener whose probably never been to school before and is adjusting. This is disgraceful.
@ashleyvestal9030
@ashleyvestal9030 Жыл бұрын
I agree, and congrats on having a Kindergartner!!! (I taught it for years :). I will say that there are kids that age who need a more conducive setting in order to protect the majority of children. Even little kiddos can be very dangerous - not that this is the case in your experience. Probably fine. I can't imagine calling the police - a mental health professional is, in my opinion, the best option. Or just a caring adult who is calming......
@mariee.5912
@mariee.5912 Жыл бұрын
They called the police because the child ran out of the school, but they can still see the child. So, I don't know what the school's procedure is, but I would just go and get the boy. I agree the police wasn't necessarily. Hah, your child's school understand staff how to handle tantrums.
@jhoughjr1
@jhoughjr1 Жыл бұрын
Yeah just sit and let the kid throw their fit that’ll workout for 18 years.
@jhoughjr1
@jhoughjr1 Жыл бұрын
@@mariee.5912 no they don’t. Letting them happen and just watching is not how to handle them
@martyal
@martyal Жыл бұрын
I believe that this was a case of the school administrators not wanting to do what they are paid for.
@LadyCin611
@LadyCin611 Жыл бұрын
Geezzzz! 5 year olds act this way sometimes. As a foster parent of 17 years, had I said or did any of these things, I’d lose my license and thrown in jail! They should have given the boy strategies to calm down and a way out. Shaking my head!
@denine5232
@denine5232 Жыл бұрын
Completely agree with you!
@Throatzillaaa
@Throatzillaaa Жыл бұрын
Thank you for fostering! ❤️
@jhoughjr1
@jhoughjr1 Жыл бұрын
Foster parents have zero business commenting of discipline of children. The private prisons thank you for your service
@jhoughjr1
@jhoughjr1 Жыл бұрын
Yeah that’s what kids need to learn when you break the rules the system will make sure you feel happy and hold your hand.
@wholeshebang1
@wholeshebang1 Жыл бұрын
@Fuzzy Friends Rescue Volunteer - "Wait 'Til Your Father Comes Home!" was what mothers would tell their children as a threat when they were misbehaving, in the 1950s to '60s - which implied that they'd be strongly reprimanded, yelled at, spanked or beaten, once their father got home. It worked to quiet me & my siblings, but the punishment caused me & 2 of my 3 siblings trauma (my C-PTSD is the worst, because it continued into my teens & early 20s). My older sister, the "golden child," was never hit, roared at or chased around the house by a 6', 230-lb raging man - a cop - until I ran out of the hoyse or locked myself in the bathroom. She & my mother were the only ones who would stop him. I'm 62 and still get panic attacks when men bellow at me as I cycle in downtown traffic - inexplicably outraged at me, after they've cut me off or almost collided into me, while _they're_ on their cellphones or driving aggressively, to speed through a red or make a roght turn. *_They're_* the ones protected in their 2000-5000-lb vehible!
@Olive131
@Olive131 Жыл бұрын
Hard to understand the adults not having a basic understanding of the maturity level of a five year old. Instead of showing compassion and caring, they displayed anger and violence. The only thing taught to that very small, young, child was that it was okay to be violent as long as you're the bigger one.
@ConsciousExpression
@ConsciousExpression Жыл бұрын
I think they showed a fine demonstration of the maturity level of a five year old. How could they do that without understanding it?
@paulc-xj9ck
@paulc-xj9ck 23 күн бұрын
Cops have no empathy.
@nadineo9436
@nadineo9436 Жыл бұрын
This child could have been on the spectrum, therefore any kind of threat or anger would have been met with immediate stress/fear from the child. It's unfortunate that the child's emotional well being took a backseat to the adults that were supposed to help him.
@katherineharris6917
@katherineharris6917 Жыл бұрын
Great comment,except I would just edit your last sentence: It's "frightening" that...
@R3DR0PE
@R3DR0PE Жыл бұрын
Elopement ( running away from a caregiver or situation in general ) in stressful situations is a big thing with autistic people, especially during a meltdown. I stopped going to school because I would constantly have meltdowns simply because I wasn't given any accommodations since I wasn't diagnosed with ASD at the time. It was horrible and extremely stressful.
@moniqueloupe8867
@moniqueloupe8867 Жыл бұрын
ASD was my very first thought.
@call_in_sick
@call_in_sick Жыл бұрын
@Jan Lima I agree we medicalise everything when I’m fact a lot if the time it’s simply because the kid has never been told no. Simply shitty behaviour. No one wonder there’s generations of people incapable of hearing no!! Insanely shitty parenting.
@jaymike3302
@jaymike3302 Жыл бұрын
They can yell at me for $275,000. Even at age 5 I'd know that was a good deal.
@thecassandraeffectvsperilo6754
@thecassandraeffectvsperilo6754 Жыл бұрын
My mentor in college was a brilliant Child Psychologist..he taught me a lot..HOWEVER the one lesson that was stressed the most, and I still ALWAYS apply today? Never assume an issue/solution through ONLY the lense of what you've personally experienced *=)*
@browniehendricks3726
@browniehendricks3726 Жыл бұрын
Good point
@healerscreek
@healerscreek Жыл бұрын
Excellent advice!
@denine5232
@denine5232 Жыл бұрын
Great advice!
@CankleCankle
@CankleCankle Жыл бұрын
I think most parents or authorities with little to no education will revert to rearing children in the same manner that they were raised with. But anyone with half a brain knows that today’s children are different than the children of 50 years ago. Children should be uplifted and told they are loved no matter what. Corporal punishment only leads to resentment and revenge seeking as well as all kinds of disorders that disrupt emotional development. Edit: k I wrote this reply before finishing the video. But In the outro, Dr Grande spelled out exactly what I was trying to say.🤠
@kingdele01
@kingdele01 Жыл бұрын
That is a great point! My initial reaction is that this child was just another brat & his parents were after a payday. But now, I am thinking it is possible that there could be another underlying problem with him.
@pfranks75
@pfranks75 Жыл бұрын
I’m a retired special education teacher and counselor who dealt with children who exhibited explosive or uncontrollable behavior. We had a quiet room and would use it before an incident gets out of control. It makes teaching difficult when you have students who exhibit defiant behaviors.
@cantfindmykeys
@cantfindmykeys Жыл бұрын
Better yet, trade the quiet room for homeschooling. I hated school and classrooms. I would constantly leave the school grounds and wander into villages and jungles and even the desert in foreign countries. I would eventually be picked up by authorities and taken to the embassy and my parents would be notified. My mother didn't discipline us and we were brats. Luckily, homeschooling worked well. I placed 2 years above my grade level after returning to the States and then to private school which worked fine because I missed most of the days and still passed when I scored well on final exams. College was not a problem. I showed up on the first day for the syllabus, then for the midterm and final, and turned in papers and got my degrees. I never liked school. It was a prison to me. Some children don't do well or belong in an "educational institution" type of setting. Ironically, my Dad was a tenured professor and my mother was also an educator and speech pathologist. They both had lifetime careers in a setting I couldn't tolerate.
@user-xg3uy6hq9g
@user-xg3uy6hq9g Жыл бұрын
some school use yoga and breathing/meditation to caalm kids down.
@maxbygrapes3681
@maxbygrapes3681 Ай бұрын
How many rooms do you have? Seriously.
@nikkilynn4000
@nikkilynn4000 Жыл бұрын
My fiancé did a little bit of time in prison when he was younger (we're in our 30s) for some nonviolent property crime (stealing from a store while he was using drugs... And for being caught with said drugs). He's been clean for a long time now. When we got into the spanking debate (we plan on having kids), he said to me the old "i was hit and i turned out fine" that most people do. I said ".... *His name*... You went to prison..." And there was nothing he could say to respond to it. So no. If you think hitting small humans worked because it supposedly worked for you, it doesn't. I'm glad he's since came around.
@joincoffee9383
@joincoffee9383 Жыл бұрын
Yep, nowadays teenagers stealing is becoming widely accepted if not considered cute and trendy and popular thing to do. Something to be proud of. One is considered dull , no fun or not adventurous if doesn’t steal. What a world.
@nikkilynn4000
@nikkilynn4000 Жыл бұрын
@@joincoffee9383 I agree. He's very embarrassed and remorseful about his previous actions now. It was years before we met, but I do believe he's changed and became a better person. Obviously stealing is wrong, but i believe someone can be rehabilitated and given mental health/therapy and drug treatment too. The man I know would NEVER dream of doing that stuff again.
@00RoxPink
@00RoxPink Жыл бұрын
I hate when people say that. If they didnt turn out fine we would just say that the person is bad so they deserved it.
@SailingWindGypsy
@SailingWindGypsy 23 күн бұрын
Millions of kids (including me) got "spankings" and did turn out to be law abiding, high achieving adults (like me). Not saying spanking is the best option, but your personal experience is not data.
@Watcher6868
@Watcher6868 Жыл бұрын
Thanks Dr. Grande. Listening to you and paying attention to all the details you shared made me reconfirm how important it is to stay calm with my own child (he throws a cocktail of tantrums daily). I admit that my voice had not been pleasant on many occasions after his erratic behavior but I’m the adult in the room. Overcoming how I was treated growing up is a challenge but a key to be a better dad. Thanks.
@katherineharris6917
@katherineharris6917 Жыл бұрын
Keep working on being a better dad. There is nothing more important for you to be doing. I'm glad you see that.
@jaymike3302
@jaymike3302 Жыл бұрын
I hope I get yelled at for $275,000.
@jessicamillslagle3203
@jessicamillslagle3203 Жыл бұрын
When my now 12 year old child was younger, they went through the terrible 2's, 3's and 4's. (It was 6 good months and 6 awful months.)... What I did was to allow space for the daily breakdown. My child would go to nursery school. I would have a snack and drink for the car ride home. (Being Hangry is awful.) We would listen to music and I would let my kiddo talk or not. (Their choice.) As soon as we walked through the front door, my child would flop on the floor and have a melt down. I didn't react, I simply stepped over my child. I took the folder out of the backpack and hung it up. I would then get some play clothes out and turn on some cartoons. Then I would start making dinner. Kiddo would always come to me in the kitchen and hug my leg with teary eyes and say "I love you mamma." I would wipe the tears away and ask if they wanted to help cook or watch cartoons. (Obviously, I would say "I love you too baby".)... It was weirdly hard in the beginning to be understanding of younger children and their frustration. (Growing up I was met with resistance and punishment.)... I was always the adult with my child. I allowed for age appropriate tantrums. (It sucked though and it's not easy!)... Now I have a great relationship with my child and we can talk about literally anything... we are all making it up as we go along. You'll probably be just fine. You are doing a great job. 👍
@Watcher6868
@Watcher6868 Жыл бұрын
@@jessicamillslagle3203 thanks for sharing your experience and I appreciate your words. Happy Labor Day
@Watcher6868
@Watcher6868 Жыл бұрын
@@jaymike3302 :) and
@justinthomas3389
@justinthomas3389 Жыл бұрын
And cops have the nerve to act like they don't know why their reputation is what it is these days.
@EJ1443
@EJ1443 4 ай бұрын
Their inability to actually read/listen, watch videos of police brutality against minorities and neurodivergent, disabled people and handcuffing nonviolent detainees to transport them to the hospital or station, is scary to me. Some police have no introspection whatsoever. I sympathize that they have a hard job and see trauma, however they really need longer training and more time on disability and de escalation.
@dustybun1378
@dustybun1378 Жыл бұрын
The absoloutle lack of common sense of all the adults is pretty disheartening.
@ZombolicBand
@ZombolicBand Жыл бұрын
makes me wonder how many children go through this daily but nobody knows about it
@dustybun1378
@dustybun1378 Жыл бұрын
@@ZombolicBand with officers at almost every school these days probably happens all the time.
@reddiver7293
@reddiver7293 Жыл бұрын
This is less about how the police handled this case than the endless levels of liability for teachers, administrators, staff etc. If any of the above had restrained or made the least physical contact with the child, they could have been fired and/or sued. Not to mention being canceled in the media on a national level. The police handled the situation horribly, absolutely. But how does a situation occur where police are called to deal with a violent 5 year old?
@firstlastname7437
@firstlastname7437 Жыл бұрын
The original video said the police are called in this situation because the boy left school grounds and the school has to call them or they are liable for any harm that happens to the child. You need to watch the video entirely because no one mentions he attacked other students and teachers, destroyed a 1000. computer, and the classroom. Schools use to have separate classes for students who needed more care but now they are blended right in. Mom brings up in the video that he has no friends because of the outbursts and hurting others.
@reddiver7293
@reddiver7293 Жыл бұрын
Bingo
@JonasC22
@JonasC22 Жыл бұрын
Somehow shrieking into a child's face that's freaking out doesn't strike me as the best option to get them to calm down.
@wasupgaming
@wasupgaming Жыл бұрын
its worked for me in the past
@TomikaKelly
@TomikaKelly Жыл бұрын
The adult shouldn't have to shriek in a child's face. The child should be behaving or the parents should remove the child from being a burden to the school.
@ericjones1289
@ericjones1289 Жыл бұрын
An adult that shrieks into a child's face shouldn't be allowed anywhere near children for any reason
@PrimericanIdol
@PrimericanIdol Жыл бұрын
@@wasupgaming I bet it traumatized you.
@jhoughjr1
@jhoughjr1 Жыл бұрын
Yeah better to just give them what they want immediate that way they really get conditioned to act out anytime they want. Good idea!
@KatieDoesCrime
@KatieDoesCrime Жыл бұрын
To be fair, I also reacted irrationally to the mystery meat in my elementary school lunches.
@LoneWulf278
@LoneWulf278 Жыл бұрын
😂
@shayb413
@shayb413 Жыл бұрын
WOW, this made me laugh SO HARD!! I was always truly a perfectly behaved child, probably too much, but I would literally have to fight back tears on "Cowboy Surprise" day, when that was the lunch for the day! It had the NASTIEST "meat" (mystery meat!!) EVER!! But seriously, this made me laugh SO HARD, so thank you for that!! 😂🤣😅 This situation was so incredibly ridiculous and horrible- I can't believe these Officers still have jobs after they acted this way to a itty bitty FIVE YEAR OLD child!! But you're comment here was ABSOLUTE GOLD!! 🥇👍😁
@judeinLA.
@judeinLA. Жыл бұрын
Oh my🤭😂
@mariee.5912
@mariee.5912 Жыл бұрын
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@KatieDoesCrime
@KatieDoesCrime Жыл бұрын
@@shayb413 Oh, my, just the name "Cowboy Surprise" sounds ominous!
@raquellofstedt9713
@raquellofstedt9713 Жыл бұрын
It amazes me that parents and others seem to think that without hitting a kid, you can´t set boundaries. I run into that here in Sweden constantly. All kids are different, but there are a range of things you can do before you should even have to think of lifting your hand. Honestly!
@mkuti-childress3625
@mkuti-childress3625 Жыл бұрын
Times are definitely changing. I see it both in the US and Europe. I hear parents talk to their kids now the way we used to train teachers to treat kids, and it’s really great to hear. But it’s happened really slowly, and there are still plenty of people around who think it’s okay to hit their kids-or worse, that it’s the only way to have discipline. If a teacher can have a classroom full of five year olds who listen and follow the rules without hitting any of them, ever, parents can certainly do it with one kid. It’s all about patience and not taking what a child does or says personally-which so many adults still do. Kids act like kids naturally. They’re supposed to have a lot of squirmy energy, they’re supposed to test rules and want to interact with their environment. Parents getting angry when their kids don’t sit quietly and immediately obey are wasting their time and energy and jeopardizing their relationships with their kids. Set boundaries and enforce them calmly and consistently, knowing that kids have to be taught how to behave. And give them attention when they are behaving instead of just when they misbehave. Some kids are so desperate for attention that they misbehave-not purposely, but automatically-to have more interaction with their parents.
@riseuplight
@riseuplight Жыл бұрын
@@beorlingo Yeah maybe she's talking about unassimilated immigrants
@gulfgal98
@gulfgal98 Жыл бұрын
I am 75 years old and I grew up in a house where my parents never laid a hand on me or my sister. We both ended up happy and well adjusted adults who have happy memories of our childhoods. It is definitely possible to raise a happy and productive child without hitting him or her.
@kualabear
@kualabear Жыл бұрын
I lived in Sweden in the 1990’s and smacking a child was illegal back then you never saw it and Swedish friends would let their children get away with a lot. They were way ahead of most countries in this at the time and every country knew you couldn’t smack your children in Sweden.
@jhoughjr1
@jhoughjr1 Жыл бұрын
Amazing to me how many people think their kids are far too good to be spanked. Over my life I’ve seen the effects of permissive parenting vs authoritarian. I know which keeps the prisons full
@yeenbean3318
@yeenbean3318 Жыл бұрын
I'm a fully grown adult and this story activated my fight or flight response. This kind of thing absolutely stays with you for the rest of your life. Clearly there's something more going on with the boy that needs to be looked into to figure out why he's behaving this way. Punishments don't work in every situation, and sometimes they can make it worse. In my admittedly limited experience with kids just from being one, sometimes they can panic and feel like they have no other options when adults act like this. From a kid's point of view, if the adults who are supposed to care for them are "losing it", then the situation is beyond the point of benefitting from any sort of cooperation. That would possibly make a child panic and react in a way that reflects the adult's behavior because they've effectively been given an example of how to respond. I'm not saying for sure that this is what was going on in this situation, but that's just what it seems like to me based on what I know about similar things. In other words, in order to not be in more trouble, the kid would have to be the bigger person and not act like the adults in the situation. Obviously that doesn't happen because that's not how kids work. I also think a lot of times the punishments that adults inflict are disproportionate to what the kid has done. It shouldn't be up to a 5 year old to deescalate a situation. I'm not qualified to make any kind of decisions about this, so this is just an armchair opinion from a random person on the internet. I think the correct response would be to stay with the kid in the parking lot until he calms down enough to go back to school willingly and then talk it out there to figure out why he was having issues in the classroom. Even if it takes a long time to stay with him in the parking lot, you're being paid to help resolve conflict, not to yell at kids. If a professional in any other field acted like this on company time, they would be fired no questions asked. I'm not saying that's necessarily what needs to happen here because that's not up to me, but I'm giving this example as a metric for the severity of the problem.
@LisaPFrampton
@LisaPFrampton Жыл бұрын
Perfectly said!
@b3n3d1ct10n
@b3n3d1ct10n Жыл бұрын
So well put!
@jhoughjr1
@jhoughjr1 Жыл бұрын
No. To not be in trouble he had to do as he was told, like Fauci said to all of us
@deannang455
@deannang455 Жыл бұрын
"A society can be found in how it treats its most vulnerable members." Mahatma Gandhi
@maxshea1829
@maxshea1829 Жыл бұрын
@@jhoughjr1 LOL!
@cheerfulremorse
@cheerfulremorse Жыл бұрын
"You don't go to prison for beating your child." Wow. Edit: 4:10 timestamp
@KarlMarxFanClub
@KarlMarxFanClub Жыл бұрын
I’m like, Ummm you should.
@LottieSue
@LottieSue Жыл бұрын
Beating a child is child abuse and yes, people go to prison for that. Perhaps, your definition is different. What is the definition of beating someone? 1 : an act of striking with repeated blows so as to injure or damage also : the injury or damage thus inflicted. This is very different than time outs and spanking.
@tianna1116
@tianna1116 Жыл бұрын
@@LottieSue who are you directing your comment to? If it’s OP I think you may have misunderstood
@andiejoanides9233
@andiejoanides9233 Жыл бұрын
Terrifying statement from a police officer!
@mariee.5912
@mariee.5912 Жыл бұрын
You can physically discipline your child without being severe under the law, but I don't understand how people do that. Especially children in distress.
@tommccormick9290
@tommccormick9290 Жыл бұрын
Dr Grande's voice can have a calming effect. Sometimes I get too calm and fall asleep like halfway through this video so had to play it twice.
@lnc-to4ku
@lnc-to4ku Жыл бұрын
Really loved and appreciated your whole take on this! Their behavior was absolutely terrible! I think you hit the nail on the head when you said "Without the ability to exercise their power, the officer's essentially had their own temper tantrums." ♡♡
@queenofweaves916
@queenofweaves916 Жыл бұрын
If a child is acting this way there is something deeper going on more than the boy being “bad”.
@troy3456789
@troy3456789 Жыл бұрын
The boys mama is provoking his wrath by ignoring him or whatever, but not by caring too much or by showing the boy too much compassion and discipline.
@thereal4113
@thereal4113 Жыл бұрын
Yes. Maybe a month in a mental health facility might solve his issues and put him on a path better coping skills.
@Kalleesto
@Kalleesto Жыл бұрын
He’s FIVE
@thereal4113
@thereal4113 Жыл бұрын
@@Kalleesto so were the Menendez Brothers.
@TomikaKelly
@TomikaKelly Жыл бұрын
That's not the school's problem. If he has these kinds of issues he shouldn't be in that school.
@eveo2223
@eveo2223 Жыл бұрын
Shepherd of the devil? Not even my late mom could've come up with that one! I miss her so! Loved the analysis and thank you for reminding us that violence is not the answer
@gyrlyninja
@gyrlyninja Жыл бұрын
That’s a quote from the late, great Bernie Mac. 🥰
@deannang455
@deannang455 Жыл бұрын
These adults are the "shepherds of the devil." “If anyone causes one of these little ones-those who believe in me-to stumble, it would be better for them to have a large millstone hung around their neck and to be drowned in the depths of the sea.” (Matthew 18:6)
@maxshea1829
@maxshea1829 Жыл бұрын
Speaking in tongues with eyes glowing red!
@gaylewinds4808
@gaylewinds4808 Жыл бұрын
I had something like the exact opposite happened when I worked at Walmart. A mother caught her little boy shoplifting a candy bar and we just so happen to have a police officer returning something at the customer service desk when she came to return the candy bar. She asked the officer if he would tell her kid what happened to little boys who stole. And he was as nice as he could be and was like "oh you don't want to go down this route it's bad". But the little boy only spoke Russian so his mother was interpreting for the officer, and by the way that kid started BAWLING we could tell she was not telling her kid what he was actually saying she was making it much scarier. I think she was hoping for something a little more Scared Straight, which was popular at that time, if I'm remembering my Reality TV correctly.
@shrapnel77
@shrapnel77 Жыл бұрын
That's hilarious.
@kingdele01
@kingdele01 Жыл бұрын
That was a good mother!
@sonjagatto9981
@sonjagatto9981 Жыл бұрын
@@kingdele01 teaching her child you can't always get what you want. NO!
@lawoman608
@lawoman608 Жыл бұрын
I have no excuse for ANY adult treating a 5 years old less than loving. I want to hug thus little child. Why haven't we learned from our own childhood traumas to be kind, especially to childeren? Evils live among us. I am lost for words.
@jodimarie379
@jodimarie379 Жыл бұрын
I fostered my nephews for almost two years. The younger exhibited the outbursts and the running behavior. It is sooooo difficult to handle this behavior. But these officers managed to handle it completely wrong.
@BryceChillis
@BryceChillis Жыл бұрын
anyone who thinks they need to use violence to wrangle kids should not be around any kids, ever
@lacecocoa6272
@lacecocoa6272 Жыл бұрын
Exactly you have some weirdos in the comment section talking about he was acting a fool and I'm like girl most fabulous act like that. I'm starting to think some of these people have never been around 5 year old children. They act like that.
@shadestress9898
@shadestress9898 Жыл бұрын
How unfortunate these policie officer's acted so irresponsible. It is apparent this job was beyond their abilities. Once again Dr. Grande gives a thoughtful analysis.
@Snapper314
@Snapper314 Жыл бұрын
Members of Law Enforcement these days seem to be little more then Violent Thugs in Uniform.
@jaymike3302
@jaymike3302 Жыл бұрын
I hope I get yelled at for $275,000.
@sixthsenseamelia4695
@sixthsenseamelia4695 Жыл бұрын
Unfortunate? Reprehensible.
@musicismagic3001
@musicismagic3001 Жыл бұрын
@@jaymike3302 - Traumatizing a 5 year old is very different than being “yelled at.” Try either at work and see how well it goes.
@shadestress9898
@shadestress9898 Жыл бұрын
@@sixthsenseamelia4695 I guess sarcasm is a little too subtle for you ?
@mariamerigold
@mariamerigold Жыл бұрын
So much trauma in one day. I can't imagine the repercussions that this single day will have on the rest of his life. At the hands of "professionals" at that. Imagine how those police officers treat children in their personal lives! Generational trauma needs to be educated more worldwide. Not enough people are aware of it and so many people unfortunately carry that trauma on to the next generation. Absolutely heartbreaking 😔💔 thank you as always doc, I love the way you present these cases
@YayaSweetie
@YayaSweetie Жыл бұрын
If you can't discipline your child without "beating" them, you probably shouldn't be a parent. Obviously these adults were beat as children and I think it's a very good case against that type of discipline because they are all broken humans. These people are disgusting and none of them should have their jobs.
@allinaday9882
@allinaday9882 Жыл бұрын
@Indi Darling: ….. and…. I am waiting for you to finish your first sentence…..So when this parent realizes that they cannot stop their child from harming themselves or another living being without hitting them. what do you propose happen to parent and child. Your statement is stupid unless you are hiding a timemachine from me.
@renee1961
@renee1961 Жыл бұрын
It's Appalling a 5 year old was treated like an Adult Hardened criminal!!!
@jchur7128
@jchur7128 Жыл бұрын
Only in America!
@tammylaronde8593
@tammylaronde8593 Жыл бұрын
@@jchur7128 It happens in Canada too.
@LisaPFrampton
@LisaPFrampton Жыл бұрын
@Jan Lima you're right, however you're very wrong if you condone anything the mother or cops were saying to do to this little child!
@jhozthron4415
@jhozthron4415 Жыл бұрын
Right, i mean who would have expected the police to encourage violence and even give tips on how beat up and torture a 5 year old...
@daveyoder9231
@daveyoder9231 Жыл бұрын
I think this situation happens more often than we think. Because school administrators cannot handle violent students, they call the police, who function as collectors of humans exhibiting unacceptable behavior. The reason for the behavior is unimportant- mental illness, drug use, overwhelming stress, or criminal intentions. Police are taught there is one answer, dominate the situation, and transport the subject to a place which will assume custody. It can become unbelievably hard for police officers to deal with. This case is troublesome, and the officers misread the emotional cues badly.
@angelikaskoroszyn8495
@angelikaskoroszyn8495 Жыл бұрын
Cops go through short training and then they're throw into a world where everyone can potentially carry a gun. Deescalation? There was no time to teach. Dominance and intimidation - that will help with the whole "protect and serve" thing
@relentlesseducator
@relentlesseducator Жыл бұрын
Many Elementary schools have a team of staff who are trained/certified in deescalation/physical restraint to respond to students who are escalated or violent.
@cici736
@cici736 Жыл бұрын
Agree!! Police are called for situations that are clearly not criminal and often medical. Often police treat everyone as subordinates. I was raised by a police man and I remember being told I would go to jail if I didn’t do …. Sometimes it was something as simple as brushing my teeth. It taught me that police are to be feared. Because Police are called to handle Situations that aren’t criminal, there should be protocols on how to not dominate but rather empathize and protect.
@troy3456789
@troy3456789 Жыл бұрын
taxpayers picked up the bill on this. The bar is now lowered quite a lot since no smart person would ever go to work at a police department. We should expect to see a lot more otherwise childish rash behavior from police. It used to be you had to pass a 10 year background check and have a bachelor degree in a related field of study, and impress your interviewer to get to be a police officer (they could afford to be picky, because people wanted to help the public and it paid quite well as a rewarding career field, and the list of applicants was miles long). Now, no smart person would ever do it.
@LisaPFrampton
@LisaPFrampton Жыл бұрын
Well said Mr. Yoder!
@shayb413
@shayb413 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for bringing attention to such an important case Dr. Grande! This BLEW MY MIND, this is absolutely horrific treatment and so extremely traumatizing for this child! I remember as a very young Mom, feeling judged VERY often about not "disciplining" my son enough. I was 19 when he was born, and he had high functioning Autism. I'm someone who doesn't even believe in spanking a kid, ever! But he would throw very intense tantrums, sometimes for 2-3 HOURS at a time, when he was a toddler and a very young child. I saw something other people DID NOT SEE in my child during these times- absolute TERROR and exhaustion! His heart would always be racing a million miles an hour. This would happen usually if the schedule or plans we had that he was looking forward to had to change, or if we tried to insist he try new foods, because there were only a handful of foods he would eat. I noticed when my husband got so angry, it only made things SO MUCH WORSE- my in-laws DID tell me I should "smack him' or "beat him", and once my Father in Law hit him in the face and then spanked him with a board at a family reunion- I didn't let my son near him for 2 years after that. When he was 6 the tantrums had slowed way down, but still happened occasionally. And FINALLY I saw an Autism specialist that made everything make sense to me. He told me that at least with Autism and OCD likey son had, his own BRAIN was punishing him and torturing him already, which I could see. Where everyone else saw a horrible acting, insufferable Little boy at those times- I saw my little boy suffering and unable to regulate his emotions, and he really would try to. That Doctor just said the most important thing to do was NEVER "give in" to the tantrum, and tell him whatever he was having the tantrum about, if he waited 2 hours and then could ask calmly, then we could talk about it. He also said not to react with strong emotions in any way- make sure he was safe, every few minutes ask if he was ready to calm down and use his manners and his words yet. He said don't ground him or punish him, bc his brain was already doing that- but also never give in to his demands in that state. BEST advice I was ever given, within a few months the tantrums stopped completely, and he is now 18, just graduated high school with honors, and is one of the most responsible, thoughtful, hardworking, caring, compassionate etc. humans I know. The OCD actually made him VERY organized and goal oriented, and he has never been in trouble a day in his life after about the 2nd grade. If you stay calm with children, and tell them they are capable of ANYTHING, that they are smart and unique and special, and really point out their strengths, then they will BE THAT, and work towards proving you right. It's not always just that easy of course, but 5 is still SO VERY YOUNG, and often little boys are mischievous and act out still at this age. They get bored or easily frustrated. They need common sense consequences, like privileges taken away, time out, and MOST importantly, a reward system set up to bring the focus to what good things happen when they behave WELL- that's what worked WONDERS for my son, you HAVE to give really young kids struggling like that incentives to start fighting their negative impulses, and give them them the skills and opportunity necessary to do so, and make sure they know YOU believe they are smart, capable, and GOOD, even if their BEHAVIOR is bad sometimes. Sounds cliche and cheesy but it's true, I've seen it work. These cops should've been fired and should NEVER work with children again! I would've been DEATHLY afraid of the Police FOREVER if this happened to me at age 5- the ONLY interaction Police should EVER have with children that young is to be protecting them, keeping them safe, or building trust between children and Police officers. They should be fired for telling the Mother to beat her child, and that it was legal. Sounds like she wasn't the greatest either, saying she wished she could beat him but didn't want to get arrested?? I've been a VERY EXHAUSTED, VERY FRUSTRATED Mama before, where at the end of the day, I would shut my bedroom door and just literally almost collapse in tears bc of my son's tantrums and issues and the exhaustion of dealing with that on a regular basis when he was a toddler. But still, NEVER ONCE did I want to "beat" my child, and the Police probably traumatized this kid and did some lasting harm to him, only making matters worse! Sorry, this one was HARD to wrap my head around!! In 2022?? Are we freaking Savages? I just hope nothing like this ever happens again, and I lose more and more respect for a lot of law enforcement officers more and more as time goes on, and since the implementation of body cams. Sickening to know how many of them do things, and probably always have, but we just know about it now due to the cameras. Can't believe these Officers are still even employed as such after this inexcusable incident!! Great video and Analysis on this, as per usual Dr. G! 👍🌵💖
@claracarpenter8913
@claracarpenter8913 Жыл бұрын
Very good comments.
@jaymike3302
@jaymike3302 Жыл бұрын
They can yell at me for $275,000. Even at age 5 I'd know that was a good deal.
@LisaPFrampton
@LisaPFrampton Жыл бұрын
Omg I can't even begin to tell you how much I love your comment!!! I'd give it 100 thumbs up if I could, and a few hearts and smiley emojis, just to make it clear how much I love it. My son, who is also high functioning, severe ADHD, and possibly OCD (I may also have all three myself, currently going through that process myself!), I know that my son sees and feels things far differently than others do. He just loves everyone, wants to be everyone's friend, accepts everyone and is lighthearted and so much fun! He was also a very difficult toddler and preschooler. I always remained calm with him, never hurting him or anything like that. I just "got" him and instinctively knew how to handle him. I've been having to buckle down more on discipline lately, though, because [his] Dad is not consistent with discipline, has a short fuse, and let's him have whatever he wants when he doesn't want to deal with him 😡😫So I'm left being the one doing all of it. It's exhausting!!! He does behave better for me than anyone else, though, and I think it's because he feels safe with me and that care about him. I hope we can maintain this relationship. I am very scared about him going through puberty and throughout his teen years! Anyway, with all that said, I wanted to let you know that your comment really inspired and encouraged me! Tysm!!
@ericjones1289
@ericjones1289 Жыл бұрын
Thank you Shay B for your wonderful insight. I never had any problems ever with my 2 daughters growing up. They were always really well behaved, but over many years l've seen every type of bad parent, and yelling is never the answer. The person who yells and screams is always the looser. Earning hate from the unfortunate child.
@cottontails9003
@cottontails9003 Жыл бұрын
Hello Shay , long time without texting. How are you?
@hannah50353
@hannah50353 Жыл бұрын
As a mental health professional, I can only say this behaviour is despicable. However, I understand what Dr Grande is saying when people perpetuate the cycle of abuse. I hope the officers are given the help they need to overcome their childhood traumas.
@beeimaginative
@beeimaginative Жыл бұрын
The officers clearly had suboptimal parents themselves. Watching this video made me want to throw a tantrum!
@Watcher6868
@Watcher6868 Жыл бұрын
You must be an operations research professional.
@beeimaginative
@beeimaginative Жыл бұрын
@@Watcher6868 Nope
@shayb413
@shayb413 Жыл бұрын
Yes, which is sad, but still NOT EVEN CLOSE TO AN EXCUSE to treat a 5 year old child this way, or tell his Mother to beat him!! Nothing could ever excuse their behavior with regards to such a young child, and I can't BELIEVE they still are employed as officers after this! They are NOT fit to work with the public or have ANY kind of power or leadership roles, and shouldn't be working with children OR adults. Just my opinion though. There, that was me throwing MY tantrum about it! 😂, Thanks for bearing with me! ✌️💖
@LisaPFrampton
@LisaPFrampton Жыл бұрын
@@Watcher6868 😂
@call_in_sick
@call_in_sick Жыл бұрын
Grow up
@jennw6809
@jennw6809 Жыл бұрын
It sure sounds to me that those officers' beliefs that problems are solved by force and violence, formed because of being beaten themselves.
@Michadoo
@Michadoo Жыл бұрын
Definitely a cycle of abuse being perpetuated throughout the community it sounds like :/
@sciencenate
@sciencenate Жыл бұрын
Jeez I wonder if that type is drawn towards abusing authority!
@jackk9723
@jackk9723 Жыл бұрын
It's so crazy, that attitude and belief "I was beaten as a child and it didn't hurt me" pffff well clearly it has f**ked them up if they think beating a child is acceptable.
@jhoughjr1
@jhoughjr1 Жыл бұрын
Yeah idk how people ever thought force and violence solved anything. wonder what the IRSS needs those 87K armed people authorized to use deadly force are for? surely not using force and violence to solve a problem
@PrecociousFriand
@PrecociousFriand Жыл бұрын
Well given that most police officers are psychopaths who enjoy power, force and violence it kinda makes sense, don't it.
@great567
@great567 Жыл бұрын
As a child I was abused, all it did is make more violent towards other kids. As a father to a 3 year old, I’ve never even screamed at my child or made threats. It’s all about diffusing a situation sometimes even with humor. Sometimes I look at my daughter and wonder how a grown adult can bring themselves to physically hurting a vulnerable child - Nevermind the harsh beatings I took at the same age.
@oOIIIMIIIOo
@oOIIIMIIIOo Жыл бұрын
I applaud you, someone needs to break the cycle. 🙂👍
@southbug27
@southbug27 Жыл бұрын
If you have a child, especially one that young, acting up to that extent the child is almost surely suffering from abuse & violence at home. If they’re aren’t suffering from violent abuse, then they are likely suffering from severe neglect, missing parents, or some type of chaos. These kids are the last children that need more violence & lack of respect for their physical boundaries, making how the cop picked him up & moved him against his will absolutely the wrong move. The fact that they want & demand a parent beat a child proves they have no business being cops because they won’t protect a child from abuse if they come across it, & they could be the difference between an abused child getting help or dying from abuse. Fire them immediately!
@sianmilne4879
@sianmilne4879 Жыл бұрын
Either that or undiagnosed neurodiverge/mental illness. Look deeper! Kids aren't "just bad"
@carth85
@carth85 Жыл бұрын
The sneaky dry humor always gets me.
@patball7485
@patball7485 Жыл бұрын
The humor was what got me to subscribe.
@ms.noodlemandisapproves2496
@ms.noodlemandisapproves2496 Жыл бұрын
This breaks my heart because my 4 year old son has moderate autism. I cringe when strangers approach me on how to discipline him. I respond with "you want me to beat a special needs 4 year old with a heart condition?" ( he has a congenital heart defect). I cant imagine how scared this kid was. I know my son loves police & firefighters. This would eliminate trust forever. So sad.
@melissadwiggins
@melissadwiggins Жыл бұрын
Sadly, he probably really believes that. I didn't know that I was being abused till I was like 16 years old when my guidance counselor asked me about a bruise on my arm. It's especially bad in the south.
@AnodyneHipsterInfluencer
@AnodyneHipsterInfluencer Жыл бұрын
*Mom -* "I _want_ to beat my child but I'm scared I'll get in trouble." *Unhinged Cops -* "No, you're good. It's not illegal to beat your child in Montgomery County. Just don't leave any bad burns or cuts. You _need_ to beat this beast." *Also Mom -* ~ Gets cops in trouble and costs taxpayers a quarter of a million dollars for disciplining her child "the way she wanted to." ~
@kathyglass2922
@kathyglass2922 Жыл бұрын
I'm interested in understanding what this young child experienced that upset him. The adults only focus is on the child's behavior and no inquiry into the events leading up to the child throwing the clipboard. Without understanding what happened, this will occur again, in one form or another. Whatever made him throw the clipboard, and vehemently refuse to go and to return school, matters. Something happened. What was it? Noone is trying to uncover this. It just gets dismissed, and the child labeled as a brat.
@scottashe984
@scottashe984 Жыл бұрын
Many kids are wired that way. Most of those that are violent won't change until they are much older and have been through the system many times, if then even.
@jonathanisrael9714
@jonathanisrael9714 Жыл бұрын
The Great Caper! When my daughter was around 9 years old, she decided to deliver a free 'good news' publication to the neighbors on our street. Someone called the police on her and the squad cars quickly showed up. The police scared and confused her, challenging her and making her feel as though she were a criminal. My daughter was greatly shaken up that day and has not liked nor trusted police ever since. It seems they should have special training on how to treat children.
@LDiamondz
@LDiamondz Жыл бұрын
It sounds like the kind of neighbors we had, when I was a kid. One of them once called the police on my 5 year old brother because he had a lemonade stand. They said it made the neighborhood look 'trashy.' The police showed up, were very nice, and thought the neighbor was bitter and wrong. There were 4 officers, and they all bought a cup of lemonade! We never knew which neighbor called them, could have been any of them. Adults can be so cruel to other people's children. These kind of people are crazy, imo. Your daughter should have been praised for showing initiative and creativity at 9. I bet you were very proud of her. 👍
@jonathanisrael9714
@jonathanisrael9714 Жыл бұрын
@@LDiamondz It is sad that an adult would call police on children for non criminal activity. However, it was so much more egregious the way the police responded and continued to push hard to find justification for the arrest of my little girl. I finally convinced their Sargent there was NO crime committed, and after repeatedly asking him to leave my property, he slowly and reluctantly did. We call it the 'Barney Fife' syndrome.
@LDiamondz
@LDiamondz Жыл бұрын
@@jonathanisrael9714 What a horrible experience for your daughter to go through. It should have been a non issue. To push for arresting a 9 year old girl is really disturbing. She wasn't a criminal! There is something seriously wrong with law enforcement, now, and it seems to be getting worse. Maybe in the hiring practices, they are more lenient than they used to be? As in, they hire unqualified people with no experience and lower scores? I'm sorry your daughter, and you, had to go through that. Must have been terrifying.
@jonathanisrael9714
@jonathanisrael9714 Жыл бұрын
@@LDiamondz Thank you for your empathy. Yes, it was very stressful for our entire family but especially for my little girl. I didn't mention this but what escalated tensions even further was when the police sergeant seemed to purposefully agitate and provoke me to say or do something warranting my arrest. It was unnerving and surreal to have to be pushed so hard over such an innocuous event. However, my daughter is grown now and doing well; and I make it a point to pray for police since they have such a stressful and highly dangerous job. May God help them do their jobs safely and well.
@sensualeye
@sensualeye Жыл бұрын
Growing up an Air Force kid we had law enforcement that handled kids on the bases. They were called “Officer Friendly". Perhaps in the civilian world having officers trained in dealing with children should be a thing?
@skyhawk_4526
@skyhawk_4526 Жыл бұрын
I was a cop in the USAF (a law enforcement specialist back in the days when it was still called Security Police, and then later - after 1997 - Security Forces). I'm a civilian cop now (20 years later). I can tell you in the USAF we were never specifically trained in "dealing with" kids (except for some of the legalities). Being able to appropriately handle calls or contacts involving juveniles doesn't really boil down to any training. It boils down to being reasonable and having common sense. Not everybody has that, including some police officers. To put it in perspective, the standards to become an SP in the Air Force are quite a lot lower than in the civilian world and the training is a lot less in the USAF compared to many states' civilian police academies - plus most of us were only 18 or 19 when we started in the USAF. So it really isn't about training or procedures. Having said that, I'm currently a cop in CA. Here we have a nearly 6 month basic academy (as opposed to about 8 weeks in the Air Force) and after the academy, there's about 5 months of field training before you are allowed to work without a Field Training Officer watching and evaluating your every move and word (as opposed to the Air Force where we got about a week of additional training once we got to our permanent duty station). I don't know how the training is in Maryland, but I know it varies widely from state to state - with some states basic academies being as little as 6 weeks (which is nuts to me). Also, in CA, you generally cannot arrest a child under the age of about 12. Kids under 14 are generally presumed not to be criminally liable for their actions. (There are exceptions, but there are a lot of legal hurdles that have to be met to prosecute someone under 14.) It's also against the law in CA to handcuff a juvenile under 16 unless the officer can articulate a need to do so for the officer's safety, public safety or the safety of the juvenile (and that generally boils down to the seriousness of the offense, size/strength of the kid, etc.) In CA, in the case of an unruly 5-year-old, we simply would not even get involved. It's simply not a law enforcement matter - it's a matter for parents or school officials to deal with - not the police.
@BrendaGarcia-ty2ml
@BrendaGarcia-ty2ml Жыл бұрын
How about no cops at all 😅 We have data study after data study that they’re unable to change their ways no matter how much reform we introduce.
@bthomson
@bthomson Жыл бұрын
They run in when no one else will. Yes some police behave badly but many do not. We need to have brave (foolharty?) people who are willing to engage in dangerous and scary situations at a moments notice - think of car accidents and school shootings!
@jhoughjr1
@jhoughjr1 Жыл бұрын
@@BrendaGarcia-ty2ml lol study after study eh such magic words
@sensualeye
@sensualeye Жыл бұрын
@@skyhawk_4526 I can't address how widespread the "Officer Friendly" program was, but it existed where we were stationed, Mc Guire AFB in New Jersey('72-'78). Those officers dealt with incidents that involved minors and were the face of LE to the kids on the base and housing area. I suspect if they didn't have special training, they were better suited than other officers to deal with children. Present day as an +50 adult, those positive interactions with LE have long since been erased. I've lived coast to coast, traveled the world, and had both professional and civilian relationships with law enforcement. I've concluded that training is a problem, but the larger issue is the culture within agencies and the justice system. If anyone wants to see how it's done properly (training and day-to-day operations) should look to California Highway Patrol or the Sacramento Sheriff's Department. I'm not saying they are perfect but are head and shoulders above the majority of LEAs in the USA.
@shawnnewell4541
@shawnnewell4541 Жыл бұрын
My mom would always remind me to behave myself when I was in public and that I was embarrassing her when I'd throw a tantrum in public. For me, that worked. I didn't want my mom to be ashamed of me. I wanted her to be proud of me.
@salemish
@salemish Жыл бұрын
Unfortunately, that's still a pretty shitty thing to do. Parents shouldn't be making their children's emotions about themselves. I have a narcissistic mother and she would do the same thing. If I was upset, if I got angry, if I was crying, not knowing how to regulate my emotions yet, I was never met with understanding. It was always about her and how I shouldn't be "making her look like a bad mom" or "embarrassing her". Now I've grown up emotionally stunted and have been in therapy for years for cptsd, depression, and anxiety.
@shawnnewell4541
@shawnnewell4541 Жыл бұрын
@@salemish My mom was very loving. But man, I had a horrendous temper combined with stubbornness that exasperated my mother. Shaming did work. But usually you only had to punish me once. Her most frequent punishment was to send my sister and I to our rooms. For me that wasn't a punishment. I loved being alone in my room to read my books or listen to the radio.
@Shannonbarnesdr1
@Shannonbarnesdr1 Жыл бұрын
@@shawnnewell4541 id just take away your radio and books and give them back to you in a few days or so , as ytou earned those privileges back.
@shawnnewell4541
@shawnnewell4541 Жыл бұрын
@@Shannonbarnesdr1 Mom, never thought of that. And I sure wasn't going to tell her. She died when I was 16. That was 50 years ago. I do miss her. She was sweet.
@jakefoley9539
@jakefoley9539 Жыл бұрын
Watching your videos has helped me take a more rational and analytical approach towards issues in my own life. Thank you Dr. Grande
@dianamarie5663
@dianamarie5663 Жыл бұрын
Dr. Grande I know you have two sons. I can't imagine you administering corporal punishment, threatening harm or name calling. I agree with your approach to this situation. I hope the boy get the attention and redirection he needs.
@badtrips
@badtrips Жыл бұрын
If that kid is already behaving like a psycho then he does need discipline. I guarantee you he will be in prison at some point in his life
@anneflynn9614
@anneflynn9614 Жыл бұрын
As an experienced teacher that has dealt with many children with emotional problems that acted out in school I can state that professions should always model the behavior that they want the child to exhibit.All children but especially children from dysfunctional families need love and stability.
@dee8714
@dee8714 Жыл бұрын
How incredibly sad. Poor kid. He has a lot of pent up anger and his mother doesn’t know how to manage him. Who knows what his home life is like. Also sad that she did nothing to stop the police treating her child the way they did but finds out she can make money from it afterwards. At least the money is going to the child.
@snow999
@snow999 Жыл бұрын
I worry that police won’t recognize my son is special needs. He likes to break away from me and he teachers and run out the door. However, I like that his school has a police office assigned to it. This world is just so crazy I feel it’s necessary.
@LisaPFrampton
@LisaPFrampton Жыл бұрын
My son also used to do this. They couldn't keep an eye on him and I said enough is enough and took him somewhere else where they could actually both keep an eye on him and teach him!
@TomikaKelly
@TomikaKelly Жыл бұрын
Homeschool him.
@snow999
@snow999 Жыл бұрын
@@LisaPFrampton thanks. I’m working on that right now. It’s a fight but I’m not giving up.
@snow999
@snow999 Жыл бұрын
@Jan Lima wow
@snow999
@snow999 Жыл бұрын
@Jan Lima you have no clue what you’re talking about and are quite mean spirited.
@joannaeaton9436
@joannaeaton9436 Жыл бұрын
Omgosh. This is totally wrong. And this is why we don’t trust law enforcement. (from a mum with 2 special needs kids)
@mariee.5912
@mariee.5912 Жыл бұрын
❤️ I have one special needs child and I can't imagine agreeing with the police to scare my child. All I can think the mom was stressed.
@Lisa-ir2gz
@Lisa-ir2gz Жыл бұрын
I was "spanked" (with wooden spoons and paddles) as a child. When I started having children, that is all I knew. I spanked my first child. To a lesser extent my second child. It never felt right....my older child in particular had a lot of behavior issues and would hit me back. I recognized that these situations were escalating and as the adult it was up to me to get it in check. For that reason, I stopped spanking my children. As a result my youngest child has never been spanked. I got a lot of flack over the years about not spanking my children.....but once I decided to do it differently I was committed to that. My oldest even told me a few times that his younger siblings "need to be beaten". I reminded him that I was the parent and I would handle the situation. I also apologized that I used to spank him...but reminded him that I didn't do that anymore. It is the best decision I ever made. I wish I had made it sooner and never spanked any of my kids. But, I am still thankful that I came to realize my mistakes and changed my behavior.
@viviennelee2215
@viviennelee2215 Жыл бұрын
Sad that your oldest had to go through that from you and then watch his siblings get a better life
@Lisa-ir2gz
@Lisa-ir2gz Жыл бұрын
@@viviennelee2215 in a way yes. That is why I apologized to him. I couldn't in good conscience continue to do something that I realized was wrong for a sense of fairness. It benefitted him too because he no longer got spanked either. As he got older I explained to him that we do the best we can with what we know at the time. I explained that when he was younger I didn't know a better way and at first didn't know it was wrong because it was done to me as a child. But, then I realized it was not working and was damaging so I stopped. He seemed to understand. It was hard for a while tho because I was a single mom and he was my only son. People would tell him "you are the man of the house now". I would constantly tell people not to say that to him..but they would anyway. Despite my telling him that I was the parent and I would handle things, he internalized the "man of the house" thing and remembered that he used to be spanked (even tho at this point he hadn't been spanked in years) and felt that it was his job to advise me that "they need to be beaten". Not to mention the influence of my family of origin that heavily believes in corporal punishment. I just had to stand firm and remind him that I was the parent and discipline was my responsibility even if he didn't agree with how I was doing it.
@utubefreshie
@utubefreshie Жыл бұрын
You're a good parent for learning your initial mistakes in parenting and making a change and most especially for apologizing to your eldest child. I would think they're all doing well these days.
@slconley
@slconley Жыл бұрын
I watched the body camera video of this. It was so hard to watch the adults treat this little boy in this way. They should be ashamed of themselves.
@Andreamom001
@Andreamom001 Жыл бұрын
For heaven’s sake, he’s a child. He is barely more than a baby. He’s only been in the world for a short time. He needed help and support, not physical and verbal abuse! Ugh, that poor kid.
@badtrips
@badtrips Жыл бұрын
If that kid is already behaving like a psycho then he does need discipline. I guarantee you he will be in prison at some point in his life
@hicknopunk
@hicknopunk Жыл бұрын
The fact the assistant principal got involved is sick. Sick. Sick. Sick. She should be under arrest.
@Stephanie-hl8jo
@Stephanie-hl8jo Жыл бұрын
I am a teacher in the DC area and I've seen versions of this situation many times. I appreciate your analysis from the bottom of my heart.
@julielevinge266
@julielevinge266 Жыл бұрын
Never take any notice of temper tantrums, it’s just frustration from child & always best to leave them, within minutes they’ll calm down✊♥️
@11cabadger
@11cabadger Жыл бұрын
OMG that's terrible. The cops. The parent. The school personnel. And we wonder why that little boy is going to need the money for psychiatric help. If he manages to reach the age to recover it. Your observations are, as always, humorous & fitting. I think your right about their behavior & "true maturity level". Until I saw this video, I couldn't understand why not having a child in your life justifies treating a kid so insensitively. Thanks for presenting the idea that never questioning poor parenting sadly leads to the grown-up child becoming a reflection of their parent.
@huanli7968
@huanli7968 Жыл бұрын
Great analysis, especially the last comment about getting liberated from blindly accepting, complying and following parents' beliefs and behaviours,. People make decisions against their own willing and desire, then even commite their whole life to do what they don't enjoy and pride just for the sake of getting recognition or validation from their parents who in some case have no idea or even bother to think about what they want from their lives.
@alliereesor115
@alliereesor115 Жыл бұрын
When I was 5 years old I ran away from home (to my grandma's house) and someone saw me walking and called the OPP (Ontario Provincial Police) and they picked me up. I told them where I was going and they took me to my grandma's. They let me sit in the front (it was the 80s) and play with the siren, they were so nice. It was my mother who was to be feared, I don't think she'd even realized I was gone.
@wendychavez5348
@wendychavez5348 Жыл бұрын
I know someone whose autistic son, after acting out in class when he was 9 years old, was detained for hours, during which time he was sexually assaulted by at least one of the detaining officers. The mother was called ONCE, and no definite message was left, nor did they attempt to reach the child's father (who I believe was out of town on business that week). I believe that was 10 years ago, and my friend is still trying to get justice for her son and the rest of their family--including proper counseling services at schools, more appropriate facilities for handling behaviorally challenged students, and accountability for authority figures that choose to abuse people under their care. This case was obviously not affected by the laws and staffing changes she has helped to enact--that is upsetting, even to someone who has no children that could be harmed in such a manner.
@rejaneoliveira5019
@rejaneoliveira5019 Жыл бұрын
I am so happy for being able to comment right after the upload.😊 I am just speechless by the behavior of these two officers.🤦🏻‍♀️ Your conclusion was quite insightful. I think it’s just so important to identify the ways in which our upbringing wasn’t desirable and also to conduct an ongoing analysis of our own parenting. In this process we learn a lot about ourselves and we have the opportunity to fine-tune our parenting skills. Thank you so much, Dr. Grande.❤️
@LDiamondz
@LDiamondz Жыл бұрын
Hi Rejane! The police officer's behavior was ridiculous. I had to rewind the part where he asks the 5 year old, "IS THIS HOW you want to live your life?" Blinks. Yes, I heard it right. How insane is this entire situation? Some people are not cut out to be Police officers. So stupid and sad. 🤯
@rejaneoliveira5019
@rejaneoliveira5019 Жыл бұрын
@@LDiamondz Absolutely! They handled the whole situation so poorly. I don’t even know what to say.😓
@LDiamondz
@LDiamondz Жыл бұрын
@@rejaneoliveira5019Hey Rejane. 👋 The video of the encounter almost made me cry. 🥺 I didn't, though, because I was so angry at the police officers AND the mother. That boy needs help, you could see that. Heartbreaking. 💔 Not everyone who can, SHOULD have children.
@websurfer5772
@websurfer5772 Жыл бұрын
As adults we play out our childhood programming. There should be TV shows about how to parent without being abusive. In the '80s they had a show on PBS just like that on TV and it was a live broadcast of a class I was taking in college by a wonderful professor who knew how to deal with discipline without resorting to negative tactics.
@chrissied4902
@chrissied4902 Жыл бұрын
The statement of realizing your parents had no idea what they were doing is so powerful! Very freeing.
@kimberlysmith7311
@kimberlysmith7311 Жыл бұрын
Great Analysis Dr. Grande. I think like you said, the officers didn't know any better then what their parents taught then, and that's sad actually. 💞
@m.f.richardson1602
@m.f.richardson1602 Жыл бұрын
This was a good one. I totally sided with the young boy. That little guy is going to have a rough life. The mother's frustration with her son is bull. What's going on at home? Your explanation of the police was very interesting. Sounds like there could be a lot of truth to it. Thank you. Peace 💕🇺🇲
@ashleyvestal9030
@ashleyvestal9030 Жыл бұрын
The mother and son both need intensive psychiatric intervention to protect the future of society. They don't need an arrest, they need medical care. This child could potentially hurt/kill many people in the future. It shouldn't be taken lightly. Please get him (and mom) help. The "little guy" might have a rough life, but preventative measures should be taken before he destroys other lives in the future.
@LisaPFrampton
@LisaPFrampton Жыл бұрын
Well said!!
@timmyturner999_
@timmyturner999_ Жыл бұрын
“This guy is going to have a rough life” yeah I’m sure that 300 thousand dolllars he is going to get when he grows up for throwing a temper tantrum and running away from school is going to be very hard for him be real you meatball Lmfaoo beat that little shit he deserves it
@jhoughjr1
@jhoughjr1 Жыл бұрын
Single motherhood is going on at home the best way to raise boys
@ngi638
@ngi638 Жыл бұрын
😳why didn’t I see this story before ? This is nuts!
@PHlophe
@PHlophe Жыл бұрын
before you molly whopped the unruly relative ?
@SF-eo6xf
@SF-eo6xf Жыл бұрын
Wrong demography
@Jujubean9795
@Jujubean9795 Жыл бұрын
They called his parents far too late. As a mother, I would be absolutely LIVID! She had no idea what her son had endured before they even bothered to call her.
@TomikaKelly
@TomikaKelly Жыл бұрын
It sounds like the boy regularly behaves like this. As a mother, if this is your kid's behavior then he should be homeschooling NOT being a burden on the teachers and school admin.
@viviennelee2215
@viviennelee2215 Жыл бұрын
@@TomikaKelly you really want him to get beat behind closed doors without a single witness do you
@jhoughjr1
@jhoughjr1 Жыл бұрын
Nah I’m pretty sure she knew what she hath wrought.
@Jujubean9795
@Jujubean9795 Жыл бұрын
@@TomikaKelly I don’t think so. They would have expelled him. Even if he has a history of misbehaving, homeschooling is not the answer. He’s only FIVE! Beating a five year old is never the right answer.
@Jujubean9795
@Jujubean9795 Жыл бұрын
@Extremely Honest My child is over 16yo and not a parent… I accept cash, Zelle or Venmo.
@RobertaReal7980
@RobertaReal7980 Жыл бұрын
I'm really appalled the school principal didn't stop this crazy screaming behavior from the police.
@kevinc809
@kevinc809 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, assuming all this is true. Police should have carried him to the principal and left.
@ms.blanche8578
@ms.blanche8578 Жыл бұрын
I will never forget the amount of pressure that was placed on me 30 years ago to whip my young children by older relatives. I stood my ground though. BTW, I have two awesome college educated young adult children that I could not be more prouder of. Taking away privileges & time out works if a person will take the time to explore this type of discipline. Communication is key with your children.
@kingdele01
@kingdele01 Жыл бұрын
I do believe that those should be the first resort while attempting to discipline children. However, one should never remove corporal punishment from the toolkit of possible punishments. Also, having college education does not mean one does not have personality traits that come from lack of parental discipline!
@nadadhibi
@nadadhibi Жыл бұрын
@@kingdele01 nothing worse than personality traits of corporal punishment anger issues antisocial behavior. literally every dongle serial killer out there has been beat up as a child. when will you people learn hitting someone years snd years younger 10 times smaller than you is disgusting and leads to nothing good
@kingdele01
@kingdele01 Жыл бұрын
@@nadadhibi That is complete nonsense! According to that logic, then past generations of Americans & Europeans should all be serial killers, since corporal punishment was not only practiced in the homes, but in society (schools, courts, etc....)
@witch_haunts_ghost
@witch_haunts_ghost Жыл бұрын
Dr Grande strikes again! The demon sheep comment was brilliant. They are warmer than normal sheep. Those police officers sound unbelievable. That poor child. Imagine being a five year old and acting like a five year old and then being reprimanded like a 35 year old. Terrifying. I don't think the mother or the police officers have done this child any favours.
@shrapnel77
@shrapnel77 Жыл бұрын
Normal 5 year olds do not throw clip boards at a teacher and fellow student and run out of the school. Something's going on at home and I do not condone the officer's behavior.
@DJ-nk4dq
@DJ-nk4dq Жыл бұрын
The officers were acting ghetto because that’s what they know. They were beaten and abused and since the child is black, they took it upon themselves to treat him like they were treated. I watched the video of that and it was appalling. The school staff was quiet, as if in shock. The mother played right along the officers, then turned around and sued the PD. The male officer even said (paraphrasing) as long as you don’t leave burns and cuts you are ok and will not be in trouble.
@deannang455
@deannang455 Жыл бұрын
Enjoy the coming lockdowns. If this is how you treat children!
@xminusone1
@xminusone1 Жыл бұрын
Ordinary 5 years olds don't act that way in the first place. There's obviously something more going on with that kid. He should be evaluated. Kids who act like that often have many other issues.
@witch_haunts_ghost
@witch_haunts_ghost Жыл бұрын
@@DJ-nk4dq I agree with you 100%
@ieattofu68
@ieattofu68 Жыл бұрын
My son was banned from a daycare when he was 15 months old for having a tantrum and kicking one of the workers...I didn't beat him in response. He is 24 years old now and is a very kind and soft spoken gentleman with two college degrees, a black belt in tae kwon do and he doesn't drink or smoke or curse.
@shanna72030709
@shanna72030709 Жыл бұрын
Excellent analysis. I have worked in the foster care system since 1994 & this analysis parallels how foster parents can struggle with the youth they have in their home.
@cottontails9003
@cottontails9003 Жыл бұрын
How stupid police taking their anger out on a 5yr old child. I personally believe that child will probably have distrust and issues with police. Thank you Dr Grande. Brilliant analysis, sad outcome and informative topic.
@zenawarrior7442
@zenawarrior7442 Жыл бұрын
Hi dear. Heading to bed, wanted to say hi, send a hug to you, Noah, the family. You're special to me 😊💌💙💙💌🌃🌜🎋🎁♥️♥️♥️
@cottontails9003
@cottontails9003 Жыл бұрын
@@zenawarrior7442 Thank you. You are loved by all of us. Goodnight, sweet dreams 😴😚❤💙💚💖✉🎋🎋🎋🎆
@zenawarrior7442
@zenawarrior7442 Жыл бұрын
@@cottontails9003 Thank you so much, that means alot. I popped awake, saw this. Heading back to bed. Love you all too😉💛💛🤍🤍🧡🧡💫💫💯👐🌼🌼
@LDiamondz
@LDiamondz Жыл бұрын
@@zenawarrior7442 Hi Zena! 👋 I hope you are having a nice sleep! Just wanted to say hi, before I head off to bed! 😉 We are all so warm and fuzzy to each other! You both are special to me, too. I love you guys! G'night, beautiful! 🥰😍🤩😘❤🧡💙💜💫💃💃💃
@zenawarrior7442
@zenawarrior7442 Жыл бұрын
@@LDiamondz Hi 👋 I just got up, had a great sleep thanks. I hope you get rest, g'night too beautiful 😊🤗💌🫖🌃. We are warm & fuzzy...I like it! Glad to call you & CT my pals, you're both very special too⭐⭐😉💞💞🥳💛💛🏜🎇
@BrassLock
@BrassLock Жыл бұрын
Yesterday was *_Father's Day_* in Australia 🇦🇺. The timing of this analysis was perfect in suggesting how not to parent a young boy.
@nou712
@nou712 Жыл бұрын
It's not about fathers, it's about subsarahan IQ's attempting to live in modern society.
@jhoughjr1
@jhoughjr1 Жыл бұрын
Single mothers are not how to raise boys
@oregonsnob31
@oregonsnob31 Жыл бұрын
Dr Grande Ive watched at least a hundred of your videos and followed you for over a year and this particular video is hands down, your best, in my opinion. Too many bright points to list. I just want you to know how much you add to so many lives and how grateful I am for your astute candor on some current events and past events…. Resulting in group learning by using critical thinking and honesty.
@A358M
@A358M Жыл бұрын
I saw the footage last year . The cruelty ,the bulling,the mental taunting, the interigation the police did to that little boy broke my heart. The police weren't talking to him ,they were abusing him! That little boy,throughout his adult life will be traumatized for what those dispicable police did to his syche. Also,his mother complying with the two police bullies infuriated me.
@breathnstop
@breathnstop Жыл бұрын
My son acted out like that in kindergarten after lunch once. Thank god his teacher called me and not the cops because I'm afraid of what they would have done to a little black boy acting out. We found out he had low blood sugar and it had dropped very low before lunch. He was disoriented and confused and frightened. My son is now a 40 year old nurse practitioner and gets awards from the hospital all the time for his excellence in care. Police need training in first aid and medical emergencies. It seems that the cruelest most hateful sadistic people are attracted to and retained in police work in America. It's probably due to the fact that policing started here as slave catching.
@jennw6809
@jennw6809 Жыл бұрын
"They're much warmer than regular sheep." 🤣
@SynthLizard8
@SynthLizard8 Жыл бұрын
This feels like it's set in the GTA universe with NPC's cluelessly trying to figure out how to handle a child.
@HeavenEarthFloral9
@HeavenEarthFloral9 Жыл бұрын
Excellent analysis Dr Grande. A very important topic. The shocker is rewarding the child for throwing a tantrum! I was beaten as a child. As an adult having to deal with my young niece throwing a tantrum, i would look at her and ask: "Why are you laughing, what's so funny?" I kept repeating this until she realized she was not in control. I would love the response from her, "I'm not laughing!" Never acknowledge behavior one does not find appropriate.
@mr.dickbutttheog2064
@mr.dickbutttheog2064 Жыл бұрын
“You don’t go to prison for beating your child. I-what? Is this guy for real? Oh my god, I can’t believe how incredibly stupid this guy is. Apparently abuse doesn’t exist to this poor excuse of a “man”. The fact they were encouraging the woman to beat her own child is just disgusting. Hope those men don’t have families of their own (Highly doubt any sane women would’ve want to be with them in the first place) Anyways, amazing video Dr. Grande! Love you analysis and opinions 🤗
@lisaa.4667
@lisaa.4667 Жыл бұрын
He was also aware that he had a body camera recording everything. He didn't think the footage would be problematic for him and the police department. I guess he doesn't think that often.
@theuprising4847
@theuprising4847 Жыл бұрын
These kids can be very difficult to deal with. Should have called a social worker instead of the police. Other than that I don't know. Glad I'm not a parent. The kids $hi++y behavior paid off ching ching
@Khaleesi_Of_Kittens
@Khaleesi_Of_Kittens Жыл бұрын
Or the parents, maybe??
@theuprising4847
@theuprising4847 Жыл бұрын
@@Khaleesi_Of_Kittens Sending police to deal with this is like sending a child psychologist out to write traffic tickets. Says the money is in a trust for the kid. Wonder if he can collect it if he's in custody of the youth authority. Give him a teddy bear, a juice pack, and call it good.
@ashleyvestal9030
@ashleyvestal9030 Жыл бұрын
Yes!! Don't call police for a 5-yr-old. Call a mental health professional. Police are not trained for this. They (the children) need intense, in-patient, psychiatric help. Regardless of home life, they need help from caring, professional people.
@Flamsterette
@Flamsterette Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the upload, Dr. Grande.
@leylamoody3177
@leylamoody3177 Жыл бұрын
O.M.G! Fire them all and keep them all away from children! Excellent analysis, Dr. Grande! ❤️
@jackychamber534
@jackychamber534 Жыл бұрын
I wonder, who showed more behaviour of a little angry child, the cops or the 5 year old?
@SwimminWitDaFishies
@SwimminWitDaFishies Жыл бұрын
Just watch an episode of Nanny 911 (or SuperNanny) and you'll see that 99% of behavior problems stem from the quality of parental interaction with their children. No institution of boundaries and failure to impose consequences are the prime root cause for kids behaving badly.
@winnieloh4279
@winnieloh4279 Жыл бұрын
It’s a show that’s curated. There’s good lessons but they didn’t show the ones where their approach fails because the child has other underlying neurological issues.
@jhoughjr1
@jhoughjr1 Жыл бұрын
@@winnieloh4279 this still jives with everything I’ve seen in my life. I’ve known many criminals and watched them grow up. Patterns emerge
@jamesparlane9289
@jamesparlane9289 Жыл бұрын
I wish my parents had the balls to sue a few school teachers I had.
@LDiamondz
@LDiamondz Жыл бұрын
Same. Some of them can be very cruel.
@pinktights747
@pinktights747 Жыл бұрын
Why does the behavior of the police and school officials not surprise me. Thank you Dr. Grande for all the free education you have given us all.❣️🌹❤️🥰😘
@OpinionatedBastage
@OpinionatedBastage Жыл бұрын
I certainly agree that the officers were ill-equipped and handled the situation poorly. With that said, I also believe the child's mother has done a very poor job raising him thus far. The extreme behavior of that child suggests he has a substandard parent or parents and I'd say that's putting it kindly.
@judyannstreich7499
@judyannstreich7499 Жыл бұрын
And Mom then turns around & sues everyone for big bucks and they pay $250,000 ?? That, to me, is rewarding bad parenting or was Mom just kidding when she said she wanted to beat the boy too??
@OpinionatedBastage
@OpinionatedBastage Жыл бұрын
@@judyannstreich7499 I was thinking the same thing.
@TheAnubis57
@TheAnubis57 Жыл бұрын
@@judyannstreich7499 Good point. I was about to comment hat too. May I add that the mother maybe a doting her son the point that he'll be sociopath someday.
@AcPh-nc3vz
@AcPh-nc3vz Жыл бұрын
Don’t know the situation. The child could have a developmental disability that the parent is not aware of or equipped to handle.
@annalisegiovanni7032
@annalisegiovanni7032 Жыл бұрын
Hey Dr. Grande💞 Thank you for the new video! It's really nice to have a new video from you to watch after spending all weekend with a ton of family. I hope you're having a great holiday weekend!!
@Renee_VSJ
@Renee_VSJ Жыл бұрын
Happy Labor Day, Dr. Grande! Thank you so much for everything you do!
@k.i.1700
@k.i.1700 Жыл бұрын
The last bit where you talk about gaining insight and realizing that your parents had no idea what they were doing...when you can break away from your own childhood experiences and think for yourself - hence breaking the cycle. This really spoke to me. It wasn't until I was in my late teen years when I realized it was not ok for a parent to hit/spank to discipline a child. The scars are everlasting.
@sylwia7060
@sylwia7060 Жыл бұрын
Wtf? 😲This is totaly INSANE to listen to for me who lives in Norway were they can't put handcuffs until you are 16 y old and even then they 9 out of 10 times DON'T do that.... so sorry this scared little kid had to go thrue this horrible trauma😢, sending lots of love and light 💝
@teemadarif8243
@teemadarif8243 Жыл бұрын
Thank you ! I found your analysis to be spot on , to say the least. Your professional opinion is very much appreciated and needed .
@techyall
@techyall Жыл бұрын
Thank you Dr. Grande, you always provide the best videos from a Doctors perspective, there are many parents who deserve to listen to you. I'm very proud to know that you exist online.
@celestecelestial90
@celestecelestial90 Жыл бұрын
I 😂 when you mentioned they used dirty Harry as a training video, so true. I have a baby cousin who I had to help raise (now is 16) who was really difficult to be around as a young child so I know kids can be so aggravating, but kids are kids. They don't have the same thinking capacity as adults so they are going to act out at some point and do stupid things. I believe in discipline by taking away activities, making them do extra chores and taking away recreational items (like tablets and toys temporarily), but I don't believe in child cruelty. I don't want to raise a mentally unstable person because I was cruel to my child physically and emotionally.
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